OutdoorNebraska

2022 Wetlands Guide for Web - single pages

Access digital copies of guides and regulations publications from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Issue link: http://digital.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1488352

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 81 of 87

82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 GUIDE TO NEBRASKA'S WETLANDS invertebrate populations. Prairie Naturalist 19:251–258. Nagel, H. G., T. Nightengale, and N. Dankert. 1991. Regal fritillary butterfl y population estimation and natural history on Rowe Sanctuary, Nebraska, USA. Prairie Naturalist 23:145–152. Nelson, R. W., J. R. Dwyer, and W. E. Greenberg. 1988. Regulated scouring in a sand-bed river for channel habitat maintenance: A Platte River waterfowl case study. Water Resources Management 2:191–208. Nemec, K. T., and T. B. Bragg. 2008. Plant-feeding Hemiptera and Orthoptera communities in native and restored mesic tallgrass prairies. Restoration Ecology 16:324–335. Norling, B. S., S. H. Anderson, and W. A. Hubert. 1992. Roost sites used by sandhill crane staging along the Platte River, Nebraska. Great Basin Naturalist 52:253–261. Ostrom, B. L., A. J. Caven, J. M. Malzahn, and A. Vogel. 2020. Snowy plover activity in the Central Platte River Valley in May 2019. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences 40:24–29. Pauley, N. M., M. J. Harner, E. M. Brinley Buckley, P. R. Burger, and K. Geluso. 2018. Spatial analysis of borrow pits along the Platte River in south-central Nebraska, USA, in 1957 and 2016. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences 38:36–46. Parrish, T. L., W. A. Hubert, S. H. Anderson, M. Pucherelli, and W. Mangus. 2001. Distributions of roosting sandhill cranes as identifi ed by aerial thermography. Prairie Naturalist 33:93–99. Pearse, A. T., G. L. Krapu, D. A. Brandt, and P. J. Kinzel. 2010. Changes in agriculture and abundance of snow geese affect carrying capacity of sandhill cranes in Nebraska. Journal of Wildlife Management 74:479–488. Pearse, A. T., M. J. Harner, D. M. Baasch, G. D. Wright, A. J. Caven, and K. L. Metzger. 2017. Evaluation of nocturnal roost and diurnal sites used by whooping cranes in the Great Plains, USA. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2016–1209. U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia, USA. Peyton, M. M., and J. L. Maher. 1995. A survey of mussels (Mollusca: Bivalvia) in the Platte River system and associated irrigation and hydropower canal and lake systems west of Overton, Nebraska. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences 22:43–48. Pfeiffer, K. 1999. Evaluation of wet meadow restorations in the Platte River valley. Pages 202–206 in J. Springer, editor. Proceedings of the Sixteenth North American Prairie Conference. University of Nebraska, Kearney, USA. Pfeiffer, K., and P. Currier. 2005. An adaptive approach to channel management on the Platte River. Proceedings North American Crane Workshop 9:151–154. Rabbe, M. R., A. J. Caven, and J. D. Wiese. 2019. First description of a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) attempting depredation on an adult Whooping Crane (Grus americana) of the Aransas-Wood Buffalo population. Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist 11:24–32. Ramírez-Yáñez, L. E., F. Chávez-Ramírez, D. H. Kim, and F. Heredia-Pineda. 2011. Grassland bird nesting on restored and remnant prairies in southcentral Nebraska. Ecological Restoration 29:8–9. Platte River Recovery Implementation Program. 2007. Platte River Program Baseline Document. Kearney, Nebraska, USA. Rapp, R. E., A. Datta, S. Irmak, T. J. Arkebauer, S. Z. Knezevic. 2012. Integrated management of common reed (Phragmites australis) along the Platte River in Nebraska. Weed Technology 26:326–333. Reichert, A. L. 1999. Multiple scale analyses of whooping crane habitat in Nebraska. Dissertation, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, USA. Reinecke, K. J., and G. L. Krapu. 1986. Feeding ecology of sandhill cranes during spring migration in Nebraska. Journal of Wildlife Management 50:71–79. Renfrew, R. B., D. H. Johnson, G. Lingle and W. D. Robinson. 2006. Avian response to meadow restoration in the central Great Plains. Pages 313-324 in Prairie Invaders: Proceedings of the 20th North American Prairie Conference, University of Nebraska, Kearney, USA. Riggins, J. J. 2004. Terrestrial invertebrates as bio-indicators of wet meadow restoration success. Thesis, University of Nebraska, Kearney, USA. Riggins, J. J., C. A. Davis, and W. Hoback. 2009. Biodiversity of belowground invertebrates as an indicator of wet meadow restoration success (Platte River, Nebraska). Restoration Ecology 17:495–505. Runge, J. T. 1998. Soil invertebrate responses to fl uctuating groundwater levels: a community analysis. Thesis, University of Nebraska, Kearney, USA. Safi na, C., L. Rasenbluth, C. Pustmueller, K. Strom, R. Klataske, M. Lee, and J. Beya. 1989. Threats to wildlife and the Platte River. Environmental Policy Analysis Department Report No. 33. National Audubon Society, New York, USA. Seamans, M. E. 2021. Status and harvests of sandhill cranes: Mid-continent, Rocky Mountain, Lower Colorado River Valley and Eastern Populations. Administrative Report, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Lakewood, Colorado, USA. Sherfy, M. H., M. J. Anteau, and A. A. Bishop. 2011. Agricultural practices and residual corn during spring crane and waterfowl migration in Nebraska. Journal of Wildlife Management 75:995–1003. Sidle, J. G., E. D. Miller, and P. J. Currier. 1989. Changing habitats in the Platte River Valley of Nebraska USA. Prairie Naturalist 21:91–104. Simpson, A. 2001. Soil vegetation correlations along hydrologic gradient in the Platte River wet meadows. Thesis, University of Nebraska, Kearney, USA. Smeenk, N. A. 2019. Assessing the ecological condition of Nebraska's wetland resources and amphibian communities: An intensifi cation of the Environmental Protection Agency's 2011 National Wetland Condition Assessment. Dissertation, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, USA. Smith, C. B. 2011. Adaptive management on the central Platte River–science, engineering, and decision analysis to assist in the recovery of four species. Journal of Environmental Management 92:1414–1419. Smith, D. 1997. Infl uence of landscape structure on habitat availability and use by sandhill cranes in four geographic regions of the Platte River, Nebraska. Thesis, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, USA. Sparling, D. W., and G. L. Krapu. 1994. Communal roosting and foraging behavior of staging sandhill cranes. Wilson Bulletin 106:66–77. Stahlecker, D. W. 1993. Availability of stopover habitat for migrant whooping cranes in Nebraska. Pages 132-140 in R. P. Urbanek and D. W. Stahlecker, editors. Proceedings of the Seventh North American Crane Workshop. Biloxi, Mississippi, USA. Stoll, J. R., R. B. Ditton, and T. L. Eubanks. 2006. Platte River birding and the spring migration: Humans, value, and unique ecological resources. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 11:241–254. Sutton, M. O., and N. Arcilla. 2019. New breeding record and location for Wilson's phalarope (Phalaropus tricolor) in the Nebraska Great Plains, USA. Prairie Naturalist 50:74–75. Tye, S. P., K. Geluso, and M. J. Harner. 2017. Early emergence and seasonality of the red-bellied snake (Storeria occipitomaculata) along the Platte River in south-central Nebraska, USA. Transactions of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences 37:11–17. Uerling, C. C., M. J. Hamel, and M. A. Pegg. 2019. Fish community response to habitat variables in two restored side channels of the lower Platte River, Nebraska. River Research and Applications 35.2:178-187. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1978. Nebraska stream evaluation map. Offi ce of Biological Service. Washington, D.C., USA.

Articles in this issue

view archives of OutdoorNebraska - 2022 Wetlands Guide for Web - single pages